Data upadated 2020-07-04 19:52:25. World data are from Worldometers. National and state-level mortality, case, and testing data are from Johns-Hopkins University. County and city-level mortality and case data are from the New York Times. Mobility data are from Apple. Restaurant reservation data are from OpenTable. Most data presented in this report were accessed through APIs provided by The COVID Tracking Project and NovelCOVID API.
There have been 11,182,576 confirmed covid-19 cases and 528,372 deaths worldwide.
| country | Cases | Deaths | New Cases | New Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 2,890,588 | 132,064 | 54,904 | 616 |
| Brazil | 1,543,341 | 63,254 | 41,988 | 1,264 |
| Russia | 667,883 | 9,859 | 6,718 | 176 |
| India | 649,889 | 18,669 | 22,721 | 444 |
| Spain | 297,625 | 28,385 | 442 | 17 |
| Peru | 295,599 | 10,226 | 3,595 | 181 |
| Chile | 288,089 | 6,051 | 3,548 | 131 |
| UK | 284,276 | 44,131 | 519 | 136 |
| Italy | 241,184 | 34,833 | 223 | 15 |
| Mexico | 238,511 | 29,189 | 6,741 | 679 |
There have been 2,838,465 confirmed covid-19 cases and 122,464 deaths in the United States.
| Date | Cases | Deaths | New Cases | New Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-07-04 | 2,838,465 | 122,464 | 52,406 | 306 |
| 2020-07-03 | 2,786,059 | 122,158 | 57,562 | 635 |
| 2020-07-02 | 2,728,497 | 121,523 | 53,684 | 670 |
| 2020-07-01 | 2,674,813 | 120,853 | 52,982 | 701 |
| 2020-06-30 | 2,621,831 | 120,152 | 44,358 | 596 |
| 2020-06-29 | 2,577,473 | 119,556 | 36,490 | 330 |
| 2020-06-28 | 2,540,983 | 119,226 | 42,161 | 271 |
This section summarizes state-level data. State-level graphs are shown for the largest 15 states by population, which account for NaN percent of the total U.S. population.
| State | Cases | Deaths |
|---|---|---|
| NY | 396,598 | 24,896 |
| NJ | 173,033 | 15,189 |
| MA | 109,838 | 8,172 |
| IL | 147,734 | 7,224 |
| PA | 89,375 | 6,749 |
| CA | 254,745 | 6,313 |
| MI | 72,581 | 6,218 |
| CT | 46,717 | 4,335 |
| FL | 190,052 | 3,803 |
| LA | 63,289 | 3,278 |
| State | Cases | Deaths |
|---|---|---|
| NY | 396,598 | 24,896 |
| CA | 254,745 | 6,313 |
| TX | 191,790 | 2,608 |
| FL | 190,052 | 3,803 |
| NJ | 173,033 | 15,189 |
| IL | 147,734 | 7,224 |
| MA | 109,838 | 8,172 |
| AZ | 94,553 | 1,805 |
| GA | 93,319 | 2,857 |
| PA | 89,375 | 6,749 |
Interpretation of differences in case rates across states is complicated by the fact that those states that do more thorough testing will invariably uncover more cases. A lower positive test rate is an indication that a state is doing more comprehensive testing since, when testing is rationed, only those individuals who are more likely to test positive are typically tested. The following chart compares the one-week increase in detected cases to the the number of tests administered by each state relative to population. The states of greatest current concern are those with both a large increase in detected cases and a relatively small increase in tests. These states lie in the upper-left of the chart.
| State | Cases | Deaths | New Cases | New Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DC | 10,447 | 557 | 12 | 2 |
| MD | 69,341 | 3,236 | 380 | 13 |
| VA | 65,109 | 1,849 | 716 | 4 |
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